I know the One True Tatsuya is OP as all kinds of hell, but in truth, the show was really getting to the good part. We were just uncovering his history, and it was leading into waters where it was entirely possibly that some of the badguys, including his mystery family, were going to end up, if not with exactly as much power, then at least in the same deep end of the pool as Tatsuya, magic-wise.

communist_animewrote:
you can sign this petition that i made to get a second season out. remember to share this whenever you can to try to get more signatures, i hope we really get a second season
http://www.thepetitionsite.com/490/221/082/tthe-irregular-at-magic-high-school-season-2/

no offense, but an online petition isn't going to do shit to get a 2nd season made.

it could do, it would show the makers that the anime is still popular and that a second season would still be watched and make money i don't know if you have seen the tv show kim possible that was cancelled after season 2 but a petition managed to get it renewed for a season 3

it could do, it would show the makers that the anime is still popular and that a second season would still be watched and make money i don't know if you have seen the tv show kim possible that was cancelled after season 2 but a petition managed to get it renewed for a season 3

You are overlooking that the example you cited was a series produced by a US company.

Aniplex has their own US branch, so they have hard numbers on how popular the series was. That said, what really matters is how well it did in Japan.

The series had BD/DVD sales in Japan that averaged 11,578 per volume, which is very good. (To give you a comparison, To Love-Ru Darkness averaged 11,256 per volume). If there were to be no second series, the reason certainly wouldn't be because those in charge thought it wasn't popular enough. In this case, it doesn't matter whether the petition would have any effect, as the popularity of the series is not in question.

We haven't even reached a year since the first series ended (that will happen in September). It isn't at all uncommon for two years to pass between a series and its sequel. Look at the example I gave for a series with similar sales (To Love-Ru Darkness); the original series ended in December 2012, and it is getting a sequel this summer. That is a gap of 2.5 years.

communist_animewrote:
it could do, it would show the makers that the anime is still popular and that a second season would still be watched and make money i don't know if you have seen the tv show kim possible that was cancelled after season 2 but a petition managed to get it renewed for a season 3

it could do, it would show the makers that the anime is still popular and that a second season would still be watched and make money i don't know if you have seen the tv show kim possible that was cancelled after season 2 but a petition managed to get it renewed for a season 3

You are overlooking that the example you cited was a series produced by a US company.

Aniplex has their own US branch, so they have hard numbers on how popular the series was. That said, what really matters is how well it did in Japan.

The series had BD/DVD sales in Japan that averaged 11,578 per volume, which is very good. (To give you a comparison, To Love-Ru Darkness averaged 11,256 per volume). If there were to be no second series, the reason certainly wouldn't be because those in charge thought it wasn't popular enough. In this case, it doesn't matter whether the petition would have any effect, as the popularity of the series is not in question.

We haven't even reached a year since the first series ended (that will happen in September). It isn't at all uncommon for two years to pass between a series and its sequel. Look at the example I gave for a series with similar sales (To Love-Ru Darkness); the original series ended in December 2012, and it is getting a sequel this summer. That is a gap of 2.5 years.

fair point but it does still let the creators know that it still has a fan base i guess, look at vampire knight